by Rob-NYC »
Thu Sep 29, 2016 11:30 pm
babycat wrote: i'm still getting a kind of sibilance distortion, mostly on cymbal crashes and vocal sibilance. Rob, what you mentioned seems to be involved. i may get to recapping the TSA-1 when i get home in November, but i was also considering finding a TSA-7 and working with something like that. wouldn't that be a better match for the 340 cart?
would the TSA-7 chassis (or other later Seeburg amp) fit in the LPC amp slot? do they sound pretty good?
the puzzle continues...
Yes, a later amp would be a better match with that cart and generally sound better. ..But creates one new problem that Ron alluded to. The fact that the newer amps were designed for 5 ohm loads means that if used in an LPC w/16 ohm speakers only approx ¼ of the amp's power will be delivered. There is no technical harm that will come from this, but you will lose about 6 db of potential loudness.
I operated an LPC with this stereo retrofit cart in the original amp:
http://s1192.photobucket.com/user/Rob-N ... sort=2&o=5 (same as the later carts) into a TSA-7 for twenty years ending last December. In that installation the main sound came from a line I sent to the house PA. All I needed at the machine was "some" sound. We didn't even use an RVC as level was controlled from the PA board.
There are a few options here for you to consider.
-Replace/bypass the existing preamp in the TSA-1 with an external preamp. This is a simple mod though you will have to pad-down the level from the external pre at the injection point inside the amp.
-A slightly more complicated approach is to transplant the output transformers from the TSA-1 into the later amp. This will work as they both reflect the same load back at the finals and will give the full output to the machine speakers. You'll need to make sure that the feedback wire is connected to the same terminal or a loud "howl" will result -will not cause damage.
- Use the later TSA and simply connect some external speakers to boost and open up the sound. the has the advantage of enhancing the stereo effect and should be done anyway. A TSA 7 is rated to have 32 watts output (it is actually 21 clean) that means a 16 ohm on the 32 terminals would be drawing about 8 watts/ch so you can connect external loads to equal another 25 watt/ch. As i mentioned the real RMS on all these old Seeburg amps is considerably less. the was the Wild West era before the FTC Consumer laws.
- Another option is to use the setup i used at that location and simply feed an external amp from either the high side of the volume control (fixed level) or the arm (variable).
Rob
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire